qued
Middle English
Etymology
From Old English *cwēad, *cwǣd (“evil, bad”), from Proto-Germanic *kwēdaz (“bad, ugly”) (whence also Old English cwæþ (“dung; excrement”)), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷēdh- (“muck, excrement, dung, filth, disgust, vermin”).
Cognate with Old Frisian quād (“bad, evil”), whence Saterland Frisian kwood (“evil; bad”), West Frisian kwea. Also cognate with Dutch kwaad (“evil, bad”), German Low German quaad (“bad; evil; sinful; mean; angry”), Middle High German quāt (“evil; bad”).
Related also to Old English cwēad (“dung; dirt; filth”, noun), Old Frisian quāt (“dung; manure”), Middle Low German quāt (“dirt; filth”), German Kot (“dung; feces; filth; muck”).
Adjective
qued
- bad; evil [from the 13th c.]
- Ludus Coventriae (ante 1475)
- The body that was heavy as lead, be the Jews never so qued, A-riseth from grave..
- Sidrak and Bokkus (ante 1500)
- Young and old, good and qued.
- Ludus Coventriae (ante 1475)
Noun
qued (uncountable)
- evil; harm; wickedness [from the 13th c.]
- an evil person or being, especially the devil
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.